Wishes can come out in ways you cannot expect them to come out. The folktale story “The Two-Headed Weaver,” by anonymous, discusses how one wish that you have can turn into a disaster. In the folktale story, “The Ridiculous Wishes,” by Charles Perrault, discusses how a few wishes could change the way a person sees a certain scenario by a wish. In the folktale stories, “The Two-Headed Weaver,” by anonymous and “The Ridiculous Wishes,” by Charles Perrault, the authors both mention the similarity between the main characters asking other people what they should wish for, but how they both mention the differences of how the wish/wishes came out is also noted.
To start off, in the folktale stories “The Ridiculous Wishes,” by Charles Perrault and
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In the folktale story, “The Two-Headed Weaver,” by Anonymous, the basket weaver wishes for two heads and another pair of arms, but when he returns he scares the village. According to the text, “Rejoicing, he returned home, but the people there thought that he was a demon and beat him with sticks and stones, until he fell over dead,” (anonymous par.15). This quote explains how when the basket weaver returned home, he was beaten up by his people because they thought he looked like a demon, with two heads and another pair of arms. In the folktale story, “The Ridiculous Wishes,” by Charles Perrault, the woodcutter ends up using one of his wishes to restore his wife to a good state. According to the text, “He was only too glad to use his remaining wish in restoring his poor wife to her former state,” (Perrault par.14). This quote explains how the woodcutter wanted to use his last wish on fixing up his wife, and not on something that he wants. The folktale stories, “The Ridiculous Wishes,” by Charles Perrault and “The Two-Headed Weaver,” by anonymous, shows how both of the wishes came